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Israel's
shooting of young girl highlights international hypocrisy, say
Palestinians
Chris McGreal in Khan Yunis - Monday January
30, 2006
Guardian
As the votes were counted in the Palestinian
election and the scale of Hamas's landslide became apparent to the
world, Aya al-Astal drifted away from her home and wandered towards the
fence along the border between the Gaza strip and Israel. The
nine-year-old girl's parents realised she was gone as they watched the
election results on television. They do not know precisely what
happened, but the Israeli army later said Aya was behaving in a
suspicious manner reminiscent of a terrorist - she got too close to the
border fence - and so a soldier fired several bullets into the child,
hitting her in the neck and blowing open her stomach.
Aya was the second child killed by the
Israeli army
last week. Soldiers near Ramallah shot 13-year-old Munadel Abu Aaalia
in the back as he walked along a road reserved for Jewish settlers with
two friends. The army said the boys planned to throw rocks at Israeli
cars, which the military defines as terrorism. The two killings went
unnoticed by the outside world amid the political drama, but they made
their impact among Palestinians angered by demands from western leaders
for Hamas to recognise Israel and renounce its armed struggle.
Some Palestinians see the demands as a
rejection of
a democratic election and as siding with Israel. Others see hypocrisy.
They say Israeli soldiers killed twice as many Palestinians last week
alone - both of them children - as the number of Israelis killed by
Hamas all last year. "Aya was shot in the neck and stomach. Her stomach
was hanging out," said the child's mother, Aisha. "We have no idea why
she went there but she was a child. She was so small. She was nine
years old. She didn't wear a hijab. It was clear she was just a young
girl. This is hatred."
Hamas is responsible for the murder of more
than
400 Israelis. But since it declared a ceasefire a year ago the group
has killed one Israeli, according to the Israeli government's own
figures. Sasson Nuriel was kidnapped in September and forced to record
a video demanding the release of prisoners. Hamas said it shot him when
the army got close to finding him. Hamas also carried out a suicide
bombing at Beer Sheva bus station in August that seriously wounded two
security guards, and it was behind some of the attacks by rudimentary
rockets fired from Gaza into Israel that frequently terrify but rarely
kill. Hamas said it launched the rockets in response to Israeli
attacks.
"Hamas has kept the calm for a year. Israel
is
still killing our civilians," said the Hamas leader in Gaza, Mahmoud
al-Zahar. "Why is it that the Israelis can continue to kill our people,
innocent people walking down the street, and there is no criticism from
those who tell us we must give up our historic struggle against
occupation? Why are they so afraid to criticise Israel but tell us what
to do?"
The Astal family is politically divided.
Aya's
mother voted for Hamas. The child's aunt, Samir al-Astal, backed the
losing party, Fatah. But there is little difference in their belief
that there is a double standard at work in the foreign demands of
Israel and of Palestinians.
"The Americans always give excuses for
Israel,"
said Samir. "Israel is like a spoilt son. They never pressure them.
They kill our children and no one says anything. If there is a reaction
by Palestinians to these incidents they call us terrorists."
Israel said it regretted civilian deaths but
added
that they were accidental, unlike those caused by suicide bombs. It
said Hamas was "intensively involved in terrorist actions" despite the
ceasefire
Jennifer Loewenstein amadea311@earthlink.net Stay up to date: write to have your name added to the mailing list.
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